キリスト教神学:読本(第2版)<br>The Christian Theology Reader (2ND)

個数:

キリスト教神学:読本(第2版)
The Christian Theology Reader (2ND)

  • 在庫がございません。海外の書籍取次会社を通じて出版社等からお取り寄せいたします。
    通常6~9週間ほどで発送の見込みですが、商品によってはさらに時間がかかることもございます。
    重要ご説明事項
    1. 納期遅延や、ご入手不能となる場合がございます。
    2. 複数冊ご注文の場合、分割発送となる場合がございます。
    3. 美品のご指定は承りかねます。
  • 【入荷遅延について】
    世界情勢の影響により、海外からお取り寄せとなる洋書・洋古書の入荷が、表示している標準的な納期よりも遅延する場合がございます。
    おそれいりますが、あらかじめご了承くださいますようお願い申し上げます。
  • ◆画像の表紙や帯等は実物とは異なる場合があります。
  • ◆ウェブストアでの洋書販売価格は、弊社店舗等での販売価格とは異なります。
    また、洋書販売価格は、ご注文確定時点での日本円価格となります。
    ご注文確定後に、同じ洋書の販売価格が変動しても、それは反映されません。
  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 707 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780631206378
  • DDC分類 230

Full Description


The new edition of this widely used collection of readings builds on the success of the first edition of The Christian Theology Reader. It now includes more than 300 seminal readings from the entire Christian tradition, using important sources from the patristic, medieval, Reformation, and modern periods. Each reading has been selected on the basis of audience surveys and includes a detailed individual introduction, comments, and questions.The supporting material for every reading has been classroom tested, making this Reader highly accessible for those new to the subject. Full details of the sources of the readings are provided, and all texts are cross-referenced for ease of use. It includes a wide-range of theological and denominational interests, and topical indexes allow easy access to themes throughout Christian history. This new edition also contains an updated glossary of theological terms and details of Internet holdings of theological texts for further study. Used alone or in conjunction with the author's bestselling textbook, Christian Theology: An Introduction, the second edition of this Reader is the essential guide to the key sources and texts available in the field. Both the author and publisher are committed to keeping these books available and regularly updated in the light of user comments and evaluations. More details on the second edition of The Christian Theology Reader can be found on the following website:http: //www .blackwellpublishers.co.uk/mcgrath

Contents

Introduction. Mission Statement. Preface. To the Student: How to Use this Work. To the Teacher: How to Use this Book. Acknowledgments. Part I: Getting Started: Preliminaries: 1. Justin Martyr on Philosophy and Theology. 2. Clement of Alexandria on Philosophy and Theology. 3. Tertullian on the Relation of Philosophy and Heresy. 4. Augustine on Philosophy and Theology. 5. The Nicene Creed. 6. The Apostles' Creed. 7. Anselm of Canterbury's Proof for the Existence of God. 8. Gaunilo's Reply to Anselm's Argument. 9. Thomas Aquinas on Proofs for the Existence of God. 10. Thomas Aquinas on the Principle of Analogy. 11. Martin Luther on the Theology of the Cross. 12. John Calvin on the Nature of Faith. 13. The Heidelberg Catechism on Images of God. 14. John Locke on the Formation of the Concept of God. 15. RenU Descartes on the Existence of God. 16. Blaise Pascal on Proofs for the Existence of God. 17. Blaise Pascal on the Hiddenness of God. 18. Immanuel Kant on Anselm's Ontological Argument. 19. Vatican I on Faith and Reason. 20. John Henry Newman on the Grounds of Faith. 21. Adolf von Harnack on the Origins of Dogma. 22. Karl Barth on the Nature and Task of Theology. 23. Ludwig Wittgenstein on Analogy. 24. Ludwig Wittgenstein on Proofs for the Existence of God. 25. Dietrich Bonhoeffer on God in a Secular World. 26 Paul Tillich on the Method of Correlation. 27. Sallie McFague on Metaphor in Theology. 28. Gustavo GutiUrrez on Theology as Critical Reflection. 29. Brian A. Gerrish on Accommodation in Calvin's Theology. 30. George Lindbeck on Postliberal Approaches to Doctrine. Part II: The Sources of Theology: 1. The Muratorian Fragment on the New Testament Canon. 2. Irenaeus on the Role of Tradition. 3. Hippolytus on Typological Interpretation of Scripture. 4. Clement of Alexandria on the Fourfold Interpretation of Scripture. 5. Tertullian on Tradition and Apostolic Succession. 6. Origen on the Three Ways of Reading Scripture. 7. Cyril of Jerusalem on the Role of Creeds. 8. Augustine on the Literal and Allegorical Senses of Scripture. 9. Jerome on the Role of Scripture. 10. Vincent of LUrins on the Role of Tradition. 11. Bernard of Clairvaux on the Allegorical Sense of Scripture. 12. Stephen Langton on the Moral Sense of Scripture. 13. Ludolf of Saxony on Reading Scripture Imaginatively. 14. Jacques LefTHORNvre d'Etaples on the Senses of Scripture. 15. Martin Luther on the Four-Fold Sense of Scripture. 16. Martin Luther on Revelation in Christ. 17. John Calvin on the Natural Knowledge of God. 18. John Calvin on the Relation between Old and New Covenants. 19. The Council of Trent on Scripture and Tradition. 20. The Gallic Confession on the Canon of Scripture. 21. The Belgic Confession on the Book of Nature. 22. The Formula of Concord on Scripture and the Theologians. 23. King James I on the Relation of Old and New Testaments. 24. The King James Translators on Biblical Translation. 25. Sir Thomas Browne on the Two Books of Revelation. 26. Philip Jakob Spener on Scripture and the Christian Life. 27. Nicolus Ludwig von Zinzendorf on Reason and Experience. 28. Jonathan Edwards on the Beauty of Creation. 29. William Paley on the Wisdom of the Creation. 30. Johann Adam M hler on Living Tradition. 31. John Henry Newman on the Role of Tradition. 32. Archibald Alexander Hodge on the Inspiration of Scripture. 33. Charles Gore on the Relation of Dogma to the New Testament. 34. James Orr on the Centrality of Revelation for Christianity. 35. Wilhelm Herrmann on the Nature of Revelation. 36. Karl Barth on Revelation as God's Self-Disclosure. 37. Emil Brunner on the Personal Nature of Revelation. 38. Rudolf Bultmann on Demythologization and Biblical Interpretation. 39. Karl Rahner on the Authority of Scripture. 40. Phyllis Trible on Feminist Biblical Interpretation. 41. Donald G. Bloesch on Christological Approaches to Biblical Hermeneutics. 42. John Meyendorff on Living Tradition. 43. James I. Packer on the Nature of Revelation. 44. Thomas F. Torrance on Karl Barth's Criticism of Natural Theology. 45. The Catechism of the Catholic Church on Scripture and Tradition. Part III: The Doctrine of God: 1. Athenagoras of Athens on the Christian God. 2. Irenaeus on the Origin of Evil. 3. Irenaeus on the Trinity. 4. Tertullian on Creation from Pre-Existent Matter. 5. Origen on Creation from Pre-existent Matter. 6. Origen on the Relation of God and Evil. 7. Origen on the Suffering of God. 8. Origen on the Changelessness of God. 9. Basil of Caesarea on the Work of the Holy Spirit. 10. Gregory of Nazianzus on the Gradual Revelation of the Trinity. 11. Hilary of Poitiers on the Trinity. 12. Augustine on the Trinity. 13. Augustine on the Relation of God and Evil. 14. Augustine on the Holy Spirit. 15. Epiphanius of Constantia on Sabellianism. 16. Cyril of Alexandria on the Role of the Holy Spirit. 17. Fulgentius of Ruspe on the Holy Spirit and Eucharist. 18. The Eleventh Council of Toledo on the Trinity. 19. Anselm of Canterbury on the Compassion of God. 20. Richard of St Victor on Love within the Trinity. 21. Alexander of Hales on the Suffering of God in Christ. 22. Thomas Aquinas on Divine Omnipotence. 23. Julian of Norwich on God as our Mother. 24. William of Ockham on the Two Powers of God. 25. Thomas O Kempis on the Limits of Trinitarian Speculation26 John Owen on the Sovereignty of God. 27. Benedict Spinoza on the Impassability of God. 28. F. D. E. Schleiermacher on the Trinity. 29. Karl Barth on the "Otherness" of God. 30. Jrgen Moltmann on the Suffering of God. 31. Richard Swinburne on the Concept of Creation. 32. Leonardo Boff on the Trinity as Good News for the Poor. 33. Robert Jenson on the Trinity. 34. Hans Kng on the Immutability of God. 35. Eberhard Jngel on the Crucified God. 36. Jacques Ellul on the Theology of Icons. 37. Paul Jewett on Non-Inclusive Language and the Trinity. 38. Anne Carr on Feminism and the Maleness of God. Part IV: The Person of Christ: 1. Ignatius of Antioch on Docetism. 2. Irenaeus of Lyons on Gnosticism in Christology. 3. Tertullian on Patripassianism. 4. Tertullian on the Incarnation. 5. Origen on the Two Natures of Christ. 6. Arius on the Status of Christ. 7. Athanasius on the Two Natures of Christ. 8. Apollinarius of Laodicea on the Person of Christ. 9. Gregory of Nazianzus on Apollinarianism. 10. Nestorius on the Term "Theotokos". 11. Cyril of Alexandria on Nestorius' Christology. 12. Cyril of Alexandria on the Incarnation. 13. Cyril of Alexandria on Mary as the Mother of God. 14. Leo the Great on the Two Natures. 15. The Chalcedonian Definition of the Christian Faith (451). 16. The Emperor Zeno on the Natures of Christ. 17. The Monophysites on the Natures of Christ. 18. John of Damascus on the Incarnation and Icons. 19. Gregory Palamas on the Divine Condescension in the Incarnation. 20. William Dunbar on the Incarnation. 21. Martin Luther's Critique of Nestorianism. 22. Franthornois Turrettini on the Threefold Office of Christ. 23. Gotthold Ephraim Lessing on the Ditch of History. 24. F. D. E. Schleiermacher on the "Natural Heresies" of Christianity. 25. A. B. Ritschl on the Uniqueness of Jesus Christ. 26. Martin Kohler on the Historical Jesus. 27. George Tyrrell on the Christ of liberal Protestantism. 28. Albert Schweitzer on the Failure of the "Quest for the Historical Jesus". 29. Peter Taylor Forsyth on the Person of Christ. 30. Ernst Troeltsch on Faith and History. 31. Dorothy L. Sayers on Christology and Dogma. 32. Paul Tillich on the Dispensability of the Historical Jesus. 33. Wolfhart Pannenberg on the Indispensability of the Historical Jesus. 34. Thomas F. Torrance on the Incarnation and Soteriology. 35. Daphne Hampson on the Possibility of a Feminist Christology. 36. N. T. Wright on History and Christology. Part V: Salvation in Christ: 1. Irenaeus on the "Ransom" Theory of the atonement. 2. Irenaeus on "Recapitulation" in Christ. 3. Clement of Alexandria on Christ's Death as an Example of Love. 4. Athanasius on the Death of Christ. 5. Athanasius on the Relation of Christology and Soteriology. 6. Pseudo-Hippolytus on the Cosmic Dimensions of the Cross. 7. Rufinus of Aquileia on the "Mousetrap" theory of the Atonement. 8. Pseudo-Hippolytus on the Cosmic Dimensions of the Cross. 9. An Ancient Liturgy on Christ's Descent into Hell. 10. Theodoret of Cyrrhus on the Death of Christ. 11. Augustine on Redemption in Christ. 12. Simeon the New Theologian on Salvation as Deification. 13. Anselm of Canterbury on the Atonement. 14. Peter Abelard on the Love of Christ in Redemption. 15. Hugh of St Victor on the Death of Christ. 16. Thomas Aquinas on the Satisfaction of Christ. 17. Nicholas Cabasilas on the Death of Christ. 18. John Calvin on the Grounds of Redemption. 19. The Socinian Critique of the Idea of Satisfaction. 20. John Donne on the Work of Christ. 21. George Herbert on the Death of Christ and Redemption. 22. Charles Wesley on Salvation in Christ. 23. F. D. E. Schleiermacher on Christ as a Charismatic Leader. 24. F. D. E. Schleiermacher on Christology and Soteriology. 25. Charles Gore on the Relation of Christology and Soteriology. 26. Hastings Rashdall on Christ as a Moral Example. 27. James Denney on Atonement and Incarnation. 28. Gustaf AulUn on the Classic Theory of the Atonement. 29. Vladimir Lossky on Redemption as Deification. 30. Wolfhart Pannenberg on Soteriological Approaches to Christology. 31. James I. Packer on Penal Substitution. 32. Colin E. Gunton on the Language of Atonement. Part VI: Human Nature, Sin and Grace: 1. Irenaeus on Human Progress. 2 . Tertullian on the Origin of Sin. 3. Tertullian on Inherited Guilt. 4. Tertullian on the Image of God. 5. Origen on the Image of God. 6. Origen on Inherited Sin. 7. Lactantius on Political Aspects of the Image of God. 8. Ambrose on the Un